Books

Stories

"The Bicentennial Man"
 
1976
Robot Story
3
 

In which a robot longs to be a Real Boy.

Sorry, I couldn’t resist that. This is, of course, an excellent story—the one which brought Asimov his first Hugo for short fiction and is his third-favorite of all his stories. While I wouldn’t rate it quite so highly—I don’t even consider it his best robot story—it is still worthy of high praise indeed. Andrew Martin and the people he encounters over his two century life, the society in which he lives and whose evolution he sees and even influences, and his determined quest are well drawn and fascinating. And the ending has an emotional wallop comparable to "The Ugly Little Boy".

In fact, I have only one gripe with this story— all the stuff about "the bicentennial man" itself. It’s a little too cutesy and tends to make me gag. That’s a minor flaw, but it stands out so glaringly for me that I rate the story not quite as highly as I otherwise might.

Contents
21
The Bicentennial Man and Other Stories
33
The Complete Robot
22
The Asimov Chronicles
22
Robot Visions
32
Complete Stories, The, Vol. 2
33
Hugo Winners, The, Volume Four
33
Machines that Think
32
Opus 200
 
Review copyright © 1995–2002 by John H. Jenkins. All rights reserved.
Last updated: JHJ